dead wrasse

paul692

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i have a 6- line wrasse that i have not seen in 2-days i was moving some rock around and he might have been crushed in the sand .sometimes he buries himself in the sand but always comes out for feeding . he always shows up for brine shrimp or pellet food. he is 6+ years old . if he is dead do i need to get his carcass out of my 3+ inch deep sand bed? will it hurt my water quality since he is very small if i leave him in there?
 
I think it would always be preferred to remove the body but I've never found even a trace of either of the two fish that have died in my biocube with no direct effect that I could tell. A strong CUC might have already disposed of the remains.
 
What both of them said. If he is in fact dead, stirring up your sand bed excessively may be more detrimental to your water quality than the dead fish.
 
+1 You could cause more problems by stirring up the sand bed, if the tank has been up for a while it should be able to handle the bioload of the wrasses body. Check behind the tank, I have had one jump while I was relocating rock.:)I


Declanisadog;938285 wrote: What both of them said. If he is in fact dead, stirring up your sand bed excessively may be more detrimental to your water quality than the dead fish.
 
its a 75 gal FOWLR checked the floor and the overflow twice have about 12 snails nassarius .i dont want to stir the sand since it is over 6 years old im sure there is some smelly stuff in there for sure all other fish are fine only 2 to be exact powder blue tang and a goby. thanks
 
Nassarius snails are omnivores. If there is/was a body, they'll find and consume it.

3" sand bed - do you typically vacuum it? (if not, you should, but starting that you'd need to be careful). 3" is too deep for a shallow sand bed, and too shallow for a deep sand bed. If it isn't vacuumed it can cause issues when it is eventually disturbed deeper than the Nassarius typically burrow.

I've seen fishes "vanish" for a while and then reappear but after 6 years, its habits should be pretty predictable. I'd assume it has perished, but if it's a mature tank, it's unlikely to mess up the chemistry. It's more likely that either the Nassarius and/or bristleworms, hermits and other clean up creatures have already disposed of it.

Jenn
 
jenn i vacumn the sand lightly every week with water changes .he was not in the sump but i forgot about the filter sock but he wasnt in there either.thanks
 
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